Authors: Ellen Hopkins
“Want some lunch?” His negative reply is anticipated. Oh well. At least I offered.
I’m not hungry either, but a cup of tea sounds pretty good. I put on the kettle, and I’m choosing my tea when the phone rings. It’s Christian’s work number. He made it.
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Hey. His voice is surprisingly clear.
Sorry about what happened. An apology?
Uh … I don’t know if you planned
on washing or not, but don’t bother
with the stuff on the floor in my room.
I’ll pick them up when I get home.
I shouldn’t have left them there.
That was a slovenly thing to do.
I’m not even sure how to respond
except to say, “No problem. Be safe.” The kettle whistles and I pour my
tea—blackberry green—and while
it steeps, Christian’s words percolate.
Something’s wrong about the call.
First of all, he never says he’s sorry.
And second, he leaves clothes
heaped on the floor all the time.
A little voice nags,
Better go see
what he doesn’t want you to see.
That’s it, isn’t it? There’s something …
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I don’t hurry to look, because now
that tiny voice says,
You don’t want
to know. Wish it would make up its
mind. Do I want to know or don’t I?
IT’S A SMALL PILE
At the foot of the bed. One chambray shirt. One pair of boxers. One pair of jeans, all smelling of scotch. I pick up the shirt. Nothing unusual but
the spreading stain. Ditto the underwear.
Ah, but in the front pocket of the jeans, there is an unfamiliar cell phone. Christian’s?
I hold it in one hand, stare at the dark screen while the minuscule voice whispers fiercely,
Turn it on. Why are you waiting?
If I were the type to talk to myself, I’d say,
“I’m waiting because I’m afraid if I look, what’s left standing will collapse
completely, crushing me beneath it.” But I really have no choice, do I?
I push the button. Slide the arrow
to unlock. Look at the apps lined up on the screen. Messages. Calendar.
Games. Notes. Utilities. Camera.
Photos. My eyes stop there. Photos.
I tap and up comes the Albums screen.
Las Vegas. New Orleans. Atlantic City.
Paris. Rome. Venice. London. Istanbul.
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Hawaii. St. Thomas. Puerto Rico. Trips Christian has taken over the past five years.
TRIPS
Ostensibly for business.
Trips when I was pregnant.
Trips when I had a new baby.
Trips when there was no choice
but to leave me home, caring
for our chronically ill daughter
and sexuality-searching son.
Trips without me.
Trips with her.
Skye Sheridan, a rising star
at ITV. But whether her sun
began to climb before or after
she started sleeping with Christian, I don’t know. That she is sleeping
with him is clear in the photos.
Photos that show a couple in love.
A couple posing for the camera.
A couple kissing. Laughing.
Eating. Drinking. Being way too merry across the country, around the globe.
A couple, doing those things
while I was home, pregnant.
Home, caring for Shelby and Shane.
Home, while my husband,
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Christian Trask, took his heart away from me and gave it to Skye Sheridan,
“just a coworker,” who also happened to be a rising star in the falling night
of his life.
A STAR RISES
Pale. Frail. A stitch
of embroidered light
upon the dark forever
fabric of space. And
somewhere
beneath the spreading
embellishment, night
creatures begin their opera
of croaks and hoots and
humming, unaware
that elsewhere
a sun
has risen into a parallel
plane. And what sound
mind could possibly claim
such precision is random?
As every alpha wave
begins
its forward flow,
an equivalent tide starts
its omega journey, fated
to die.
ANDREA
FATE HAS DECREED
I am to remain single. I knew
that years ago. So why the hell
did I think Fate had changed
her mind? I am an idiot. Men lie.
I know that. Men cheat. I know
that too. They cheat
on
me.
They cheat
with
me. And what’s messed up is that it isn’t any better to be the cheated-with than it is
to be the cheated-on, because
the outcome is the same. I am
at home, alone, on Saturday.
No date. No dinner out. No sex
to come. No daughter, even. She’s still at Brianna’s. Holly’s surprise party included a sleepover. Surprise!
Holly knew all about it, of course, though she faked surprise pretty
well. I think what shocked her
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the most was that her in-laws
were there. Jace’s mom even gave
her a present—a live orchid. Uh,
okay. Holly is to plants what Raid
is to ants. A thing of beauty, doomed.
MORE THAN SURPRISED
Holly seemed majorly distracted
pretty much all evening. She picked at her cake—a fabulously lopsided
chocolate-on-chocolate affair, baked by Brianna and Harley. I tried to help, but they wanted to do it all themselves.
The kids insisted on karaoke, and Holly did do a pretty good rendition of
Material
Girl
before retreating into her obvious desire to be engaged somewhere else.
As the evening progressed, I pulled her off to one side, hoping to talk about Robin.
She allowed me a few minutes of
complaint before offering weak advice.
First of all, you don’t even know who
that was. Why don’t you call back and
talk to him? Maybe it was his sister
or something. And if it wasn’t, forget him.
You deserve someone better.
That’s right.
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Because they’re lining up on my doorstep.
SHE MIGHT BE RIGHT
About calling Robin back.
Ascertaining whether or not
the sleepy-voiced woman
with access to his cell phone
while he was snoring nearby
was, in fact, his sister.
But logic rarely lies.
The real problem, of course,
is I am a coward. I hate
confrontation and validation
of my logical suspicions
would most certainly lead
to that. I’m tired of fighting.
My dukes are dropped.
I don’t have much vested
in the relationship. I’m not
freaked-out in love with him.
All that breathless anticipation
was, realistically, a lot more
like adolescent crushing.
Like, totally doomed to fail.
MY CEREBRAL MEANDERINGS
Are interrupted by the telephone.
Robin?
Ah, come on, Andrea.
Just look at you.
No, not Robin. Marissa.
Leave it. She hardly ever
calls unless there’s a problem.
I seriously consider leaving
it, and it goes to voicemail.
Hi. It’s me…
wavering.
Can you come over …?
Damn it. Not today. Too busy
feeling sorry for myself to—
I really need someone
to talk to.
Someone to talk to? Me? Like,
sister to sister or something?
Wow. That’s different, isn’t it?
Probably shouldn’t leave it.
I probably shouldn’t. Whatever
it is sounds important.
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Anyway, talking to her has to be
better than talking to yourself.
THEN AGAIN, MAYBE NOT
When I call to let her know
I’m on my way, her single-word
acknowledgment sounds shaky.
By the time I get there, she is
trembling. Pacing like a caged
panther. I imagine the worst.
But Shelby is not the source
of her distress. And what I see
on the cell phone screen makes
me ashamed of myself for moping
around about Robin. Holy, as some
people might say, fucking crapola!
When Marissa first hooked up
with Christian, I liked him well
enough, though I found him cool.
As the years progressed, and their
shared difficulties pushed him ever further away from Missy, my opinion of him retreated to the remotest
reaches of family connection. But I wouldn’t have called it active dislike.
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At this moment, I despise him.
Infidelity is never a good thing.
But what I see here is adoration.
MARISSA AND I
Haven’t been very close lately,
but a fierce swell of sisterly love makes me wrap my arms around
her. Her first reaction is to tense, but when I say, “Oh, Miss, I’m so
sorry,” every muscle seems to liquefy.
I’ve rarely seen her cry, and she
fights it now.
I knew something
was wrong. Maybe even suspected
he was sleeping around. But I never
expected anything like … this.
They’re completely in love. Aren’t they?
Rage jerks her from my arms, fires
up her tears, and suddenly I become an impotent bystander. I want to
help. Have no clue how to. Guess
I’ll just ask a ridiculous question.
“Who is she? Do you have any idea?”
Yes, I do.
The words seethe from between taut lips.
She works with him.
Travels with him, as you can see.
According to the company newsletter,
“Skye Sheridan is a rising star at ITV.”
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Wonder who else there knows why.
SURELY NOBODY ELSE KNOWS
But when I suggest that, she tells me about seeing Chris and this Skye person, sitting across a table, looking into each other’s eyes as lovers do,
in unencumbered view by the window.
How he saw Missy, Claire, and Shelby.
How he jumped up to say hello, but returned to his window-side seat unapologetically.
If he’s that open about their relationship, it is most probably assumed at work, if not admitted to. Men are such dogs.
“Does Chris know you know?”
She shakes her head.
Not yet.
Now she tells me about his argument
with Shane. How he left for work.
Phoned to divert her from his booze-soaked clothes.
It’s not his regular
cell phone. I’ve never seen it before.
God, why would … how could …
I just can’t believe all the lies!
I can but don’t say so. Cheating
prick! A bloat of indignation
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escapes in the belch of a single
question, “What are you going to do?”
THE OBVIOUS ANSWER
Would be to head straight to divorce court. Take the bastard for all he’s got.
Offer up the evidence, ask a judge
for alimony and child support. Make Chris’s bank account suffer so at
the very least he can’t afford luxury trips for himself and Ms. Sheridan.
Of course, that would free them to
get married. But who knows? Minus
the money, he might be less attractive.
Missy says none of that, however.
I’m not sure yet. And until I am,
please don’t tell anyone. Not Mom
and Dad. And especially not Shane.
“Why not? Don’t you think Shane
needs to know that his father is a—”
No! Shane and Chris barely speak now.
I don’t want that rift to grow any wider.
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To tell you the truth, I’m surprised
Shane doesn’t already suspect. He’s—
I DON’T GET TO HEAR
What she thinks Shane is because
Chris’s arrival curtly cuts her off.
He breezes through the door, wearing a clearly manufactured smile,
unaware that his figurative skeleton has been outed, bones snapping, from its closet. All it takes is the look we give him to make his eyes start searching for a clue. They find it on the coffee table, in the form of a cell phone.
The grin falls away, and he starts to sputter, but there is no lie that can cover this, nor any explanation to
prevent the coming earthquake.
Should I stay and shore up my sister?
Should I go, allow a private collapse?
Chris ignores me as he half stumbles toward Missy, right hand reaching,